Academic Skill Development - Inquiry Seminars Can Make a Difference: Evidence from a Quasi-experimental Study

  • Justice C
  • Warry W
  • Rice J
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Abstract

This paper examines whether a single first-year inquiry-based seminar can have a lasting impact on students' academic skills. Fifty-four Inquiry students and 71 comparable students participated in three performance tests: a research skills exercise; an evaluation of oral presentation ability; and a test of critical reasoning and teamwork skills. In addition, participants completed a questionnaire focusing on learning approaches and experiences. The study demonstrates the feasibility of measuring long-term effects of relatively small educational interventions. Findings indicate that although universities may not be developing the skills they assume, a single first-year inquiry seminar can have far reaching effects on academic skill development and these skills are typically lasting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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Justice, C., Warry, W., & Rice, J. (2009). Academic Skill Development - Inquiry Seminars Can Make a Difference: Evidence from a Quasi-experimental Study. International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.20429/ijsotl.2009.030109

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